The night my husband told me to “go to hell,” his hand was still resting on his ex-girlfriend’s waist.
Not hovering near her waist. Not accidentally brushing against her dress. His fingers sat there comfortably, confidently, like a man who had already decided his wife was too timid, too humiliated, or too conditioned by eight years of marriage to challenge him.
We were standing in the ballroom of the Weston Hotel in Seattle, surrounded by golden lights, champagne flutes, soft jazz, and thirty guests gathered to celebrate our eighth wedding anniversary.
Our anniversary.
The cake displayed our names in silver frosting. Eleanor and Mason. Eight Years. Forever to Go.
I remember staring at those words across the room while Mason bent toward Marissa’s ear, laughing like a man who had never promised forever to anyone else.
Marissa.
His ex-girlfriend.
The woman he once described as “ancient history,” as though she were a sealed chapter, a harmless memory, a forgotten name buried beneath the life we built together.
But buried things do not place their hands on your husband inside a hotel ballroom.
I was speaking with my best friend Angela when I noticed them. Angela, a family attorney for almost fifteen years, could detect lies the way sharks detect blood. She followed my stare and stopped talking mid-sentence.
Her face changed first.
Mine didn’t.
That frightened me more than anything.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t gasp. I didn’t drop my glass. I simply watched Mason’s hand drift lower along Marissa’s back while she tilted her head toward him, smiling like she knew exactly where she stood in his life.
And where I no longer did.
Angela slammed her wineglass onto the table hard enough that the stem nearly snapped.
“Eleanor,” she whispered.
I lifted one hand slightly, asking her to stay still.
Then I crossed the ballroom.
Every step felt slow, though I know it wasn’t. I remember the scent of roses from the centerpieces. The burst of a camera flash near the cake table. Mason’s cousin laughing too loudly near the bar. A waiter brushing past me with crab cakes as though my marriage weren’t collapsing right in front of him.
When I reached them, Marissa noticed me first.
Her smile flickered.
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